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12:00 AM  Jun. 10, 2008
New Media Timeline (2000)
By David Shedden (More articles by this author)
Library Director, Poynter Institute

More in this series

Previous: 1999 / Next: 2001
View all of the years in the New Media Timeline

              SERVICES & TECH

  • There is a major denial of service attack against high profile Web sites in February 2000.

  • The Love Letter worm infects computers around the world during May 2000.
  • There will be approximately 3.6 million high speed cable Internet users by the end of the year.
    (Source: Cahners In-Stat Group)

  • "The Love Bug: Few Take an Online Sick Day Due to Virus." Pew Internet & American
    Life Project, May 19, 2000.

  • "Wireless: The Next Wave?"
    Presstime, June 2000.

  • On June 30, 2000, "President Clinton used an electronic card and his dog's name as a password to 'e-sign' into law a bill that makes electronic signatures as valid as their ink counterparts....The act, approved overwhelmingly earlier in June by both houses of the U.S. Congress, eliminates legal barriers to using electronic technology to form and sign contracts." (Sources: Reuters, CNN)

  • Ads with barcodes for the CueCat reader begin appearing in major publications such as Forbes, Time, and The Dallas Morning News. The small plastic CueCat, which is shaped like a cat, connects to computers and allows readers to link to an Internet URL by scanning a barcode appearing in a print ad or article. (CueCat is a commercial failure.)

  • Sony releases its PlayStation2 video game console.

  • "Wired Workers: Who They Are and What They're Doing Online." Pew Internet & American Life Project, Sept. 3, 2000.

  • "Weblogs: A History and Perspective." Rebecca's Pocket, Sept. 7, 2000.

  • "Worry About the Worm: Cousins to computer viruses, worms can cause more problems." PC World, Sept. 22, 2000.

  • "New Internet Users: What They Do Online, What They Don't and Implications for the Net's Future." Pew Internet & American
    Life Project, Sept. 25, 2000.

  • "Usenet Sale: Sounds to Silence?"
    Wired, Oct. 25, 2000.

  • In November 2000, the board of the Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers (ICANN) approves seven new website domain names: .biz, .info, .name, .pro, .museum, aero, and .coop.

  • The number of American adults with Internet access grew from about 88 million to more than 104 million in the second half of 2000. The average American Internet user spends 4.2 hours a week on the Internet.
    (Source: Pew Internet Project)

  • "Dot-Com Is Dead; Long Live Dot-Com!"
    TheStreet.com, Nov. 3, 2000.

  • "Invasion of the 'Blog': A Parallel Web of Personal Journals." New York Times, Dec. 28, 2000.

    Additional Resources

 

 

 

 

          THE MEDIA

Awards

Statistics
  • The America Online dial-up service has 25,000,000 subscribers.
    (Source: AOL)

  • "More than 1,200 North American daily newspapers have launched online services."
    "Worldwide, there are more than 4,000 daily, weekly and other newspapers online."
    (Source: NAA's 2000
    Facts about Newspapers
    )

  • There are approximately 1,305 television stations with sites on the Internet or dial-up services.
    (Source: Editor & Publisher)

Additional Resources


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